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Writer's pictureKevin Scarbinsky

Trent Dilfer needs a refresher on UAB's history with 'freakin' Alabama'

Were you there?


Of all the things Trent Dilfer said during his tone-deaf postgame press conference Saturday and his unapologetic Monday morning coffee talk, that question shook down the Blazer thunder as much as either of the UAB coach's cavalier reminders that this former underdog dynasty of a football program is not "freakin' Alabama."


UAB football has gone through some things in its relatively short life, death and rebirth. The worst moments sprang from some hard heads and cold hearts on the UA System Board of Trustees, who followed the lead of the late Paul Bryant. The Bear did not believe UAB should have a Division I athletics department, let alone an FBS football program.


Gene Bartow, to his ever-faithful, ever-loyal, everlasting credit, disagreed.


Since that first big-boy game at Auburn in 1996, the internal barriers to UAB football success have ranged from subtle sabotage to outright opposition. The relationship between the BOT and its most lucrative campus hit bottom thanks to the duplicitous 2014 plan to put a final, fatal stake through UAB football's heart in the alleged service of fiscal responsibility.


The scheme worked but only briefly until, rallying around the staying power of Bill Clark, "the vocal few" found their voice and the Gang of Seven local business leaders reached for their wallets in the actual service of what was good for the university and the city.


Which brings us to Saturday, as gray a day as UAB football has experienced in its new Protective Stadium home. For the second straight year, the team was no match for Navy, the final score settling at 41-18. The crowd, even bolstered by the visitor's supporters, was barely large enough to merit that description. 


After that predictable defeat, Dilfer interrupted the first postgame question so his grandson could join him at the front of the room. No one would've paid much attention to that nice family moment had the coach not punctured it with this comment: "He can come up. It's like two of them (reporters in the room). It's not like this is freakin' Alabama. Let's go."


Let's not. Let's stop and think. Let's understand how that remark, no matter how innocent Dilfer's intent, would land on the people who worked to birth this program and then bring it back. ...





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